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The AAPG/Datapages Combined Publications Database

Houston Geological Society Bulletin

Abstract


Houston Geological Society Bulletin, Volume 51, No. 06, February 2009. Page 25 and 27.

Abstract: Structural Restoration and Previous HitPetroleumNext Hit Systems Modeling of the Wyoming–Utah Thrust Belt

Hans Axel Kemna1, Monika Majewska-Bell, Keith Mahon, and Kristijan Kornpihl
1Director of UCON Geoconsulting, Cologne, Germany

An approximately 160-kilometer (99 mile) long 2D section of the Wyoming-Utah thrust belt and the Wind River Basin, including the La Barge and Tip Top gas fields, has been modeled using the advanced technologies of structural restoration and Previous HitpetroleumNext Hit systems modeling. The model is based on publiclyavailable data. Due to the highly complex tectonic history of the area, characterized by extensive thin-skinned thrusting as well as basement-involved flexural movements, a detailed structural restoration was carried out using the software package 2D Move.

The structural restoration accounts for lateral sediment transport, i.e., erosion and re-sedimentation, and flexural isostasy effects.

A Previous HitpetroleumNext Hit-systems model was created using the paleo-geometries derived from the structural restoration. Modeling of the temperature/pressure history, as well as maturation and Previous HitpetroleumNext Hit migration, was carried out using the TecLink Previous HitapplicationNext Hit of the PetroMod software package.

The resulting model provides detailed insight into the history of the Previous HitpetroleumNext Hit systems in the area, with a special focus on the La Barge and Tip Top gas fields near the eastern margin of the Wyoming-Utah thrust belt. Several Previous HitpetroleumNext Hit systems, and a source of CO2, occur stacked in this area. Detailed migration simulations with source rock tracking revealed that the occurrence of gas and condensate can only be explained with the presence of very effective sealing lithologies.

The combination of structural restoration and Previous HitpetroleumNext Hit systems modeling is a very powerful tool for the analysis of Previous HitpetroleumNext Hit systems in tectonically complex environments. An approved workflow has been established for this purpose.

Map of the area with location of the section ( after Knight et al., 2000, modified.).

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Present-day Input Geometry

Simulations Output: Previous HitPetroleumTop migration (vectors).

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